Authors: E.C. Blake
She made her way to a large, comfortable room on the second floor of the same square tower from which the bell had rung. The room was warmed by a massive fireplace in the outside wall, and lit by large arched, glassed windows on two sides. Today the fire burned low and the windows had been pushed wide open to let in the mild spring air. Drops of water from melting snow on the roof fell past outside, sparkling as they caught the sun, a constant stream of diamonds.
The Lady sat in a plush red armchair by the fire. An identical chair, empty, stood to her left. The only other furnishings in the room were a round table of polished wood and the six matching chairs ranged around it. Three young women and three young men sat there, silent and still, hands folded in their laps. In the center of the table rested a large gray stone.
Mara stopped as she entered the room. “Um, hi,” she said to the unexpected sextet.
They looked at her unsmiling.
“These are people from my village,” the Lady said, “who have volunteered to help you with your education.”
“Thank you,” Mara said, but still got no response. She looked at the Lady. “Are you going to introduce us?”
The Lady made a dismissive gesture. “Their names do not matter; they will only clutter your mind.”
“I'd really like toâ”
“Not now, Mara,” the Lady said, with finality. “You must keep a clear head.” She got up from her chair. “The stone,” she said, pointing at it, “will be the target of your magic today. I would like you to lift it from the table.”
Mara nodded. “I understand.”
“Good.” The Lady looked at her. “As you did with Whiteblaze, reach out for their magic. Remember, focus it on the amulet you wear, not on yourself. Draw it into the black lodestone crystal, and only then let it flow to you. Can you do that?”
“I . . . think so,” Mara said. She closed her eyes. There was no real reason to do so, but it helped her focus. She reached out, feeling the magic in the bodies of the young people around the table. To her Gifted senses, the amulet she wore seemed heavy and solid as lead. She tugged tentatively at the magic within the volunteers. It flowed out easily, far more easily than she had expected, and rushed toward her. She gasped, and barely managed to direct it away from her and into the black lodestone amulet.
She sensed the magic pouring into the crystal, far more than an ordinary urn of black lodestone could hold. But the feel was the same: and magic collected in black lodestone she knew well how to control.
She reached into the crystal and cautiously drew some out.
The power
tasted
like the raw magic she had drawn on so many times before, fresh and powerful and alive, but it flowed into her smoothly and, above all,
painlessly
. It filled a void inside her, the vacuum that could only be filled by the life-magic she had never before tasted without searing agony. Now it was just
there
, inside her, making her tingle from toe to crown. She heard a slight moan of pleasure and knew it had issued from her own mouth, but she was beyond feeling any embarrassment. Breath coming in short pants, she opened her eyes. The people around the table sat with heads bowed, as though half-asleep. She no longer cared what their names were.
“The stone,” the Lady said. “Can you lift it?”
Lift it?
Mara thought contemptuously.
I can do more than that.
She reached out with her magic, a lash of red fire that seized the stone and not only lifted it from the table but hurled it out the open window, driving it in a straight line unaffected by gravity until it vanished from her sight and she felt her connection to it vanish.
She turned to the Lady. “How was that?” she said, ready to be praised.
But the Lady glared at her through narrowed eyes. “Foolish,” she said coldly. “I hope there was no one under that rock where you lost control of it and it crashed down.”
Mara blinked. She hadn't thought of that.
The Lady's expression softened. “But as far as control of the power goes . . . that was excellent,” she said. “Excellent, and very encouraging.” She looked away from Mara to the six volunteers. “They will need time to regain their strength. Let us leave them to it. Walk with me.”
They went out from the chamber and back onto the battlements where Mara had stood earlier. “How did that feel?” the Lady asked.
“It's hard to put into words,” Mara said. “But it was . . . good. No pain. And so much power . . .” She glanced at the Lady. “Would the amulet . . . could the amulet . . . also protect me from the . . . the âsoulprints' of those who die in my presence?”
Or those I kill?
she thought, but didn't say out loud.
The Lady smiled. “Yes,” she said. “The potion blocks the nightmares. Whiteblaze can take them away. And the amulet keeps them from happening at all. If you are alert, and direct the magic from the dying person into the black lodestone crystal, it will have no impact on you at all.”
“Beyond the ordinary impact of a person's death,” Mara said.
The Lady inclined her head. “Of course. I am not suggesting it prevents any
emotional
impact. But there is a difference between that and endless nightmares of the dead returning.”
Mara nodded. “Thank you again for this, then,” she said, touching the amulet. And then a new thought occurred to her. “These soulprints . . . the fact that magic is so intimately bound with a person's thoughts and feelings . . . that's how the Masks work, isn't it? There's a link between the Mask and the person's mind, and the Watchers know how to read it.”
“Exactly,” the Lady said. “Which brings us to the subject of tomorrow's lesson, since you passed today's with such ease.” She smiled a little. “I'm going to show you how to make Masksâreal Masks that will cling to and take the shape of their wearer's face and not fall apart, but also Masks that tell the Watchers nothing. I will also teach you how to take an
existing
Mask and alter its magic so that it can no longer betray its wearer. If all goes as I hope when we move against Aygrima, you will not need that skill. But if things go awry . . . then you may. I have plans for more than one contingency.”
“Catilla's dream come true,” Mara said.
A Maskmaker at last. Daddy would be so proud . . .
She blinked away sudden tears. Then she frowned. “If you know how to make Masks . . . could you also make Masks that do what the Autarch's newest ones do: drain a little magic all the time, and feed it to you constantly?”
The Lady's smile vanished. “I could,” she said.
“And Masks that put some of your magic into those who wear them, so that you can control their thoughts and actions?”
“I could,” the Lady said. “But why would I? Those with sufficient command of the Gift can manipulate the magic that fills every living thing in endless ways . . .
without
Masks. I have that ability. I suspect you do, too.” Her smile returned. “But that is a concern for another day.” She looked down into the village. “No more lessons today. There is work in the village that requires my assistance. Every year when the ground thaws there are buildings that need repair. The villagers do most of the work themselves, of course, but in an emergencyâif a building appears in imminent danger of collapseâI lend a touch of magic. Hamil has identified several structures he would like me to help with.”
“Can I come with you?” Mara said.
The Lady glanced at her. “I don't think that's a good idea.”
“Why?”
“You just used your amulet for the first time to draw magic from humans,” the Lady said. “You should rest.”
“I feel fine.”
“I'm sure you do. But I am your teacher and your guardian.” She put a hand on Mara's, to emphasize her statement. “Trust that I know best, Mara. Stay in the fortress.”
Mara said nothing.
“I will be back in time for our evening meal together,” the Lady said. She turned and walked back into the tower, leaving Mara alone.
Mara stared out at the unMasked Army's tents, fuming. “I feel fine,” she muttered again. In fact, she felt better than fine. She felt elated, thrilled, excited. She was gaining control of her Gift/curse at last. She wanted to tell someone about it, someone who would understand what that meant to her.
She wanted to tell Keltan.
The Lady would be using the waterwheel-driven lift to descend to the village. But Mara, true to her promise when she'd first arrived on that infernal device, had long since discovered the narrow trail that the wolves used. Filled with snow and ice, it had looked terribly steep and dangerous. But the snow and ice were mostly gone. And if the wolves could do it . . .
She glanced at Whiteblaze.
But not him
, she thought.
Not this time.
It would be hard to sneak through the village with one of the Lady's wolves at her side.
She went into the tower and back to her room, Whiteblaze trotting happily at her side. She took her warmest cloak, which had the added benefit of having a large hood useful for hiding her face, and then went back to the door. “Stay,” she told Whiteblaze. Obediently, he lay down, tail thumping. But he whined as she closed the door on him.
Alone, Mara hurried through the fortress' labyrinth of corridors until she emerged into a courtyard on the west end of the fortress, where it overlooked a narrow ravine that opened between the spur of the mountain on which the castle stood and the vastly larger bulk of the mountain proper beyond. An opening at the base of the wall, too low for a human to pass through without crawling but just right for a wolf, gave access to the wolves' trail, which zigzagged down the side of the ravine. Not
all
the ice had melted from it, and halfway down Mara slipped and fell painfully onto her rear, sliding a few heart-stopping feet before catching herself by jamming her boots against a boulder with a bone-jarring impact. Sore and shaken, she clambered to her feet again and made the rest of the descent at a snail's pace.
At the bottom she followed the ravine downhill to the right, emerging onto a stone-paved road that snaked up the mountain in one direction and led to a small side gate of the village in the other. The camp of the unMasked Army was on the other side of the river. To get to it, she'd have to enter the village and cross one of its three bridges, unless she wanted to travel miles down the valley, and she didn't have time for that. The danger, of course, was that the Lady, who had forbidden her to come, was somewhere in the village, and Mara had no way of knowing where.
She also had no way of knowing just how angry the Lady would be at her for disobeying her and sneaking out to see Keltan. She didn't particularly want to find out.
Well
, she thought,
at least I've had lots of practice sneaking through streets without being seen, dodging Watchers after curfew in Tamita!
Although to be sure that had been at night, not broad daylight . . .
Steeling herself, she pulled the hood of her cloak up over her head, though it was really too warm for it, and slipped through the gate.
She wondered where the road she had followed led, up the mountainâa mine, perhaps? She had seen no one on it, and the street on the other side of the gate from it was likewise empty. She slipped along that street, splashing through puddles and dodging the drifts that still clogged the shadows. The stone buildings, sturdy and warm and well-built, would not have looked out of place in the better-off sections of Tamita.
Well, the Lady's father
was
a builder
, Mara reminded herself. She wondered what the village had looked like when the Lady had arrived there as a teenager.
Surely not like this. She really has made a difference in their lives . . .
Even as she thought it, she rounded the corner of a tall stone house and found herself no more than twenty feet from the Lady herself. Mara gasped and ducked back behind the corner, heart pounding. Fortunately, the Lady had had her back to her. After she'd caught her breath, Mara peered around the corner again to see what the Lady was doing.
Arilla stood in the middle of a small courtyard, peering up, hands outstretched, at the house directly opposite Mara. Hamil stood beside her, along with others she recognized as belonging to the Lady's Cadre.
A flare of red light made Mara flinch before she realized she was seeing magic, not fire. The red glow encased the building opposite for an instant. The grinding sound of stone on stone filled the air. Then, both the glow and the sound abruptly ceased.
Around the Lady, three of the villagers sank to their knees, heads bowed, just as she had seen all of them do when the Lady had stopped the avalanche from destroying the camp.
She took magic from them
, Mara thought.
Why them, and not the wolves?
Then she realized that, for maybe the first time since she'd met her, the Lady had no wolves with her.
Where has she sent them?
Mara looked around uneasily. She still didn't know exactly how the Lady used the wolves' eyes.
What if they're hiding all around the village as spies? What if one of them is watching me now?
And then she got a shock as she realized she
was
being watchedâbut not by a wolf. Hamil, who had not been affected by the Lady's draw of magic, had turned his head and was looking straight at her.
She jerked back behind the house, heart pounding again. She waited for a shout, for the Lady to come around the corner of the house, for something to happen . . . but nothing happened at all except that she heard voices going away from her. She peered around the corner again as carefully as she could.
The courtyard was empty.
Mara took a deep breath, and hurried on.
She managed to avoid being seen again until she reached the easternmost bridge. The village streets didn't exactly bustle anywhere, compared to Tamita, but there were still a score or more villagers out and about, because shops stood at both ends of the bridge: baker, shoemaker, candlemaker, tailor. But at least the Lady wasn't in sight.
There's no reason the villagers should be surprised to see me
, she told herself. They
don't know the Lady told me not to come down here.